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Conservation

Saving the Monarch Butterfly

Wendy Russell

What’s Happening to the Monarch Butterfly?

The monarch butterfly migration is one of the most magnificent and intriguing of all natural phenomena. Monarchs migrate to Mexico each fall from the central and eastern United States and southern Canada to overwinter in the oyamel fir forests in mountains west of Mexico City. That is a more than 2,000 mile journey, flown by an insect weighing less than one-half of a gram. (By comparison, a penny weighs 2.5 grams.) In the 1990s, estimates of up to one billion monarchs made the epic flight each fall from the northern plains of the U.S. and Canada to Mexico, and more than one million monarchs from the western U.S. overwintered in forested groves on the California coast. Now, researchers and citizen scientists estimate that only about 56.5 million monarchs remain, representing a decline of more than 80% across North America.

Where Have All the Butterflies Gone?

The very existence of the eastern North American monarch migration is under immediate threat due to a number of causes: mining and illegal logging in Mexico are destroying the fir forests where the monarch overwinters; in the U.S., the loss of habitat due to development and land management practices are having widespread impacts; and in what may be the most damaging of all, chemically aided agriculture in the United States and Canada is killing both monarchs themselves and the host plants that are critical to their life cycle. Genetically modified seeds used in industrial agriculture, especially corn and soy, are engineered to withstand widespread application of the herbicide glyphosate (sold under several trade names, including Roundup), which is annihilating our native milkweed plants. This is catastrophic for monarchs, as they only lay their eggs on milkweed plants. Without milkweed, on which they lay their eggs and whose leaves exclusively feed their larvae (caterpillars), monarchs cannot survive.

What is being done

Read more about a new wildflower meadow at a Tennessee welcome center that is just one of many efforts to address the loss of pollinator habitat in this recent New York Times Opinion article.

Plants growing along I-65 near the Tennessee and Alabama border. Swath mowing allows wildflowers to bloom and attracts pollinators. Credit tWilliam DeShazer for The New York Times

Plants growing along I-65 near the Tennessee and Alabama border. Swath mowing allows wildflowers to bloom and attracts pollinators. Credit tWilliam DeShazer for The New York Times

How You Can Help

Here are some tips on how you can help to reverse the tide and stop the decline of these incredibly complex and wondrous butterflies.

  1. Plant milkweed. There are three milkweed plants native to our region: common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca), butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa), and swamp milkweed (Asclepias incarnata). They are easy to grow and thrive in full sun, in a range of soil conditions. Learn more about milkweed

  2. Grow nectar plants. Adult butterflies need nectar for food. Some great native nectar-producing plants to grow in your backyard are: asters, black-eyed susan, coreopsis, goldenrods, Joe-pye weed, purple coneflower, smooth oxeye, and wild bergamot.

  3. Avoid herbicides and insecticides. Learn to love weeds in your lawn and forego weed killers. Avoid spraying pesticides whenever possible; pesticides kill good insects (like monarch caterpillars) as well as undesirable insects.

  4. Choose your food wisely. Buy organic and non-GMO as much as possible. Conventionally grown vegetables and grains, especially corn, require the use of many herbicides.

  5. Buffer your fields. If you have fields managed for hay production, create and maintain a buffer around the edges where milkweed and native nectar plants can grow. Learn more about mowing for monarchs

Source: The Brandywine Conservancy

Ban on Single-Use Plastic Bags Signed into Law in Delaware

CONSERVATIONWendy Russell

Gov. John Carney on Monday signed legislation that largely prohibits retailers in Delaware from providing single-use carryout plastic bags to customers, a measure intended to reduce the amount of plastic bags making their way to landfills, roadways and stormwater systems.

The ban applies to stores with more than 7,000 square feet of sales space, and chain stores with three or more locations having at least 3,000 square feet of sales space.  Restaurants are excluded from the bag ban, which also allows exceptions for bags used to wrap meat, fish, flowers or plants, or that contain unwrapped food items. The legislation is set to go into effect on Jan. 1, 2021.

Gov. John Carney signs a bill that largely prevents retailers from offering customers single-use plastic bags.

Gov. John Carney signs a bill that largely prevents retailers from offering customers single-use plastic bags.

The goal is to encourage a shift to to reusable bags. Additionally, the legislation aims to clean up Delaware’s communities and watersheds, reduce storm water and trash management costs to taxpayers, and promote the health and safety of watersheds, wildlife and humans, and the ecosystem’s food chain.

Every year, the average American uses approximately 500 plastic carryout bags. Single use plastics are made from natural gas or petroleum, a fossil fuel with extensive environmental impacts in its extraction, production, and transportation.   

Along Delaware's coastlines, despite the current voluntary recycling law put in place in 2009, plastic carryout bags remain one of the most prevalent and pervasive types of litter found annually during the annual Coastal Cleanup which is only three hours each September.  Statistics maintained by Delaware’s Recycling Public Advisory Council indicate that the current law has not achieved its goal of shifting shoppers’ norms to reusable bags. In addition, plastic is the most prevalent item found in a 2018 study of Delaware’s roadside litter.